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Friday, April 30, 2010

Daily Insight: Jobless Claims and FOMC is FIDO

U.S. stocks rose again on Thursday, helping the S&P 500 erase more of Tuesday’s slide. – a 1% pick up today will compete the circle. Of the major indices, the NASDAQ gained the most, followed by the S&P500 and then the Dow.

The German Parliament came to consensus on supporting their $11 billion share of the Greek rescue package, which will prove to be the first in a series of installments over the intermediate term. Optimism over the corporate-profit story also goosed stocks, along with Federal Reserve Board nominees that are unlikely to put pressure on Bernanke to tighten anytime before the unemployment rate hits 8% -- more on that below.

Financials, which led the market lower on Monday and Tuesday, was the top-performing sector for a second-straight session. Industrials and consumer discretionary rounded out the top spots. Energy and utility shares were the worst-performing groups, but all 10 majors gained ground on Thursday.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight.

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Daily Insight: Richmond Booms, Housing Hesitation, Euro Trash, and The New Vigilante

U.S. stocks took a little hit on Tuesday after Portugal and Greece had their credit ratings cut by S&P -- Greece thrown to junk category and Portugal down two notches to A-as S&P stated the Portuguese government could struggle to stabilize it relatively high debt ratio through 2012.

I’m not sure whether it was the credit downgrades of Portugal and Greece, or the assault on Goldman Sachs by members of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations -- a circus event that showed these senators have no clue how market-making or hedging works. Goldman is not a fiduciary no matter how many times a politician wants to paint them as such; they are a market maker, which means they’re on both sides of the trade. Not that the ignorance of the political class should come as a surprise, but maybe market participants are finally acknowledging that these are the same rubes creating upcoming regulations on the financial industry, regulations that will have ramifications well beyond Wall Street. Thus far the go-for-the-gusto market sentiment has blocked clear thinking but it is only a matter of time, the potential peril via this growing wave of populism-by-convenience will be recognized.

Are investors also awakening to the fact that the European debt problems are looking increasingly like contagion? European economies, heavily dependent on government expenditures, will run into additional growth problem no matter how they react to their debt issues, has to get everyone’s attention. If the EU countries in the target circle make the tough choices to get their public finances in some sort of order, then intense near-term and intermediate economic damage will result; if they don’t then higher interest rates and debt burdens will crush them both in the short and longer-terms – either way you look at it, Europe is going to work as a large drag on global growth.

It was a broad-based decline with all 10 major industry groups down. Financials and basic materials were the worst performers, with health-care and telecoms the relative winners.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Daily Insight: Achtung Baby, Today's Data, CAT's Not All That

U.S. stocks held onto early-session gains for most of the session but eventually succumbed to a bit of weakness as Europe’s sovereign debt issues remained in focus and China appears willing to continue their pull-back of stimulus measures.

Stocks got off to a good start after Caterpillar’s results were released during pre-market trading but the results didn’t justify the reaction, unless you’re talking about the go-for-the-gusto behavior of this stock market that has people ignoring the signs of weakness. (If you want more specifics on these results, I’ll post some comments at the end of the letter.) But the recent weakness in Chinese stocks, off 8% in 10 sessions as traders fear removal of the stimulus measures, and a spreading contagion in Europe was just enough to sap momentum late in the session.

Consumer discretionary, industrial and basic materials were the only three of the major industry groups to close higher yesterday. Consumer discretionary shares remain on fire, up 125% from the March 2009 low and up 25% since February as the momentum trade comes in. Are you kidding me? These shares are now just 10% below their all-time high hit in 2007, but this time the unemployment rate is 10% vs. 5%, incomes ex-transfer payments are down instead of rising and the cash-out refi is dead. Performance chasers don’t care about these realities; their actions are blind to anything but quick money. Some things never change, and never will.

Financials led the decliners, with health care and utility shares the next worst performers.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

Monday, April 26, 2010

Preference for Value

We are frequently asked why we favor ‘value’ stocks over ‘growth’ stocks. In this article, we attempt to define growth and value stocks with two examples, provide an overview of the academic underpinnings that support value investing, explain why we believe that value investing is more intuitive than growth investing and conclude with why we still maintain growth stocks in our client portfolios.
Click here to view the full article.

David Ott
www.acrinv.com

Daily Insight: The Great Unwind, Durable Goods and New Home Sales

U.S. stocks were able to shake off the increasingly early signs of government debt-related contagion in Europe as a great durable goods orders report and a bounce in new home sales – albeit from at least a 47-year low – helped the market focus on things more positive. The gains among the benchmark indices made for the fourth winning session this week and the 11th of the past 13.

Energy shares were the clear leader, up 2.29% on Friday, as the price of crude has quickly returned to $85/barrel. Eight of the 10 major industry groups closed higher. Telecoms and consumer staples were the only groups down on the session.

For the week, the S&P 500 added 2.10%; the Dow rose 1.68%; and the NASDAQ Composite gained 1.97%. The S&P 400 (mid cap) rallied 3.56% and the Russell 2000 (small cap) jumped 3.82%. The S&P 500 has now rallied 80% from the nefarious March 9, 2009 low of 666.

Greek government-bonds continue to get hit as Germany plays a game of chicken – a game Greece is going to win, but only in the short term. Germans don’t like bailing Greece out of their troubles because they’ll be on the hook for most of the cost; to begin with, Germans seemed fairly reluctant to go with this Euro System anyway, unwilling to give up their Deutsche Mark all the way up to the Euro’s initial adoption in 1999. Greek 10-year bond spreads have hit 626 basis points (that’s 6.26 percentage points above German bunds), which means a yield of 9.03%.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight.

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com